MATE 1.17 is a testing release, it has no official announcement like 1.16 stable release (odd = unstable, even = stable). But what made me interested is because Ubuntu MATE 17.04 includes it by default so I write this short review. The most fundamental news is about MATE Desktop is now completely ported to GTK+3 leaving behind GTK+2. You may be interested seeing few changes and I have tried Ubuntu MATE 17.04 Alpha 2 to review MATE 1.17 below. Enjoy MATE 1.17!

MATE in Ubuntu MATE

I use Ubuntu MATE 17.04 Zesty Zapus alpha version as my basis to review MATE Desktop 1.17. Ubuntu MATE is a GNU/Linux operating system that redistributes the MATE Desktop as runnable version. And Zesty brings MATE Desktop 1.17 by default (although in my copy its Caja is still in 1.16). Note: Ubuntu MATE 17.04 is still in development process, it will be released soon at April 2017.

Memory Consumption

MATE Desktop (with default configs) consumes 600MB of memory at idle time. To compare it, we know that DDE in Deepin has 500MB, Pantheon in elementary OS Loki has 600MB, while Unity in Ubuntu Yakkety has 1GB.

Total usage:

The heaviest processes:

Components

MATE Desktop is an integrated collection of software. It means it has many important components that talk to each others. The most noticeable components of MATE are:

Engrampa 1.17 (archiver)

Caja 1.17 (file manager)

Pluma 1.17 (text editor)

Marco 1.17 (window manager, like Compiz)

Eye of MATE 1.17 (picture viewer)

MATE Menus 1.17 (menu component)

MATE Panel 1.17 (panel component)

MATE Control Center 1.17 (control panel)

Atril 1.17 (PDF reader)

What's New in MATE 1.17?

The most biggest change in MATE 1.17 is very technical, it's about MATE has been completely ported to GTK+3 and dropping all GTK+2 codes. But there I mention few noticeable stuffs for end users.

Caja 1.7.0

Caja in 1.7.0 brings copy queue & pausing, in 1.7.1 has completely ported to GTK+3, in 1.7.2 brings fixes for single-click and open with, and in 1.7.3 brings fixes for column. As you can see, the changes are not really noticeable for end users.